AURORA ALERT: Did you sleep through the northern lights? Next time get a wake-up call: Spaceweather PHONE. | | | SPACE WEATHER RADIO: For the new year, we are pleased to announce a new service: Space Weather Radio, streaming live "sounds from space" around the clock. Today the soundtrack is a space surveillance radar, pinging every time a meteor passes overhead. Tomorrow it could be solar radio bursts or VLF signals from the ionosphere--whatever's newsworthy. The streams are punctuated by Daily Space Weather Updates from Dr. Tony Phillips. Give it a try and let us know what you think. FIRST METEORS OF 2009: The annual Quadrantid meteor shower peaks on Jan. 3rd when Earth enters a stream of debris from shattered comet 2003 EH1. The timing of the encounter favors observers in western North America who could see dozens to hundreds of meteors during the dark hours before dawn on Saturday morning: sky map. The Quadrantids are a northern hemisphere shower--the farther north, the better. During last year's display, a team of astronomers flew above the Arctic Circle; here is what they saw through the window of their airplane: Jeremie Vaubaillon of Caltech created the composite image, which shows more than a dozen Quadrantids flying through the aurora borealis. This year's shower is expected to be just as intense. Cold winter weather often discourages people from going outside to observe this fine shower. Are you one of them? Tune into Spaceweather Radio for live audio from the Air Force Space Surveillance Radar. Listening to Quadrantid radar echos is a fun way to experience the shower--no parka required. MYSTERY PILLARS: "The air was very cold and filled with small ice crystals on Dec. 28th when we saw these strange pillars of light," reports Aigar Truhin of Sigulda, Latvia. "My son exclaimed, The aliens are coming!" It certainly looked that way." Truhin snapped this picture using his Nikon D90: Photo details: Nikon D90, 5 sec. exposure @ ISO 200-640 [more] Many people have seen light pillars. They appear during winter when city lights shine upward into the icy air. Reflections from plate-shaped crystals spread the light into a vertical column: examples. Truhin's pillars, however, are not the ordinary kind. Even two leading experts in atmospheric optics can't quite figure them out: "These pillars are mysterious," say Les Cowley and Marko Riikonen. "They have unexplained curved tops and even curved arcs coming from their base. Arcs in rare displays like these could be from column crystals to give parts of tangent arcs, others could be the enigmatic Moilanan arc or even the recently discovered reflected Parry arc. We do not know – so take more photos on cold nights!" Dec. 2008 Aurora Gallery [Previous Decembers: 2007, 2006, 2005, 2001, 2000] |